DocumentCode
1307131
Title
Are Emotional Robots Deceptive?
Author
Coeckelbergh, M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Philos., Univ. of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands
Volume
3
Issue
4
fYear
2012
Firstpage
388
Lastpage
393
Abstract
A common objection to the use and development of “emotional” robots is that they are deceptive. This intuitive response assumes 1) that these robots intend to deceive, 2) that their emotions are not real, and 3) that they pretend to be a kind of entity they are not. We use these criteria to judge if an entity is deceptive in emotional communication (good intention, emotional authenticity, and ontological authenticity). They can also be regarded as “ideal emotional communication” conditions that saliently operate as presuppositions in our communications with other entities. While the good intention presupposition might be a bias or illusion we really need for sustaining the social life, in the future we may want to dispense with the other conditions in order to facilitate cross-entity communication. What we need instead are not “authentic” but appropriate emotional responses-appropriate to relevant social contexts. Criteria for this cannot be given a priori but must be learned-by humans and by robots. In the future, we may learn to live with “emotional” robots, especially if our values would change. However, contemporary robot designers who want their robots to receive trust from humans had better take into account current concerns about deception and create robots that do not evoke the three-fold deception response.
Keywords
human-robot interaction; ontologies (artificial intelligence); contemporary robot design; cross-entity communication; emotional authenticity; emotional response; emotional robot; good intention; human-robot interaction; ideal emotional communication condition; intention presupposition; intuitive response; ontological authenticity; robot deception; social context; social life; three-fold deception response; Context awareness; Emotion recognition; Ethics; Human factors; Robots; Senior citizens; Speech recognition; Ethics of robotics; authenticity; deception; emotions; ideal speech conditions;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Affective Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1949-3045
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/T-AFFC.2011.29
Filename
5999654
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